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Princely Funerals in Europe, 1400-1700: Commemoration, Diplomacy, and Political Propaganda (European Festival Studies: 1450-1700)
✍ Scribed by Gaude-Ferragu (editor), Murielle (editor), Sabatier (editor), Gérard (editor)
- Publisher
- Brepols Publishers
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 368
- Category
- Library
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✦ Synopsis
Funerals were among the most extravagant princely ceremonies in Europe. At the end of the Middle Ages, they were grandiose affairs, carefully recorded, bringing together the emotions of both Court and People. The Renaissance heightened their effect, adding surprising elements borrowed from an Antiquity which was largely re-invented. The seventeenth century introduced ephemeral displays, elaborately constructed castrum doloris, dressed up with lavish facades and interior designs which transformed these sanctuaries into theatrical funeral pyres. <BR /><BR /> <BR /><BR /> Historians, anthropologists, and political scientists have long been interested in this subject, as can be seen from Ralph Giesey's celebrated work Le Roi est mort. Art historians have been attracted to the surviving decorations of tombs and funerary chapels. Yet historians of spectacle and of its ephemera have, hitherto, somewhat neglected a topic which is - nonetheless - at the heart of their concerns: with their elaborate settings, their costumes and decors, princely funerals challenge theatre and opera. <BR /><BR /> <BR /><BR /> It is within this context that experts from many disciplines attempt to trace the evolution of funeral ceremonies, which were much less static than is generally believed; to expose the gifts of the masters of these solemn occasions (and, indeed, of their predecessors, the heralds) who constantly devised subtle ways of capturing the attention of spectators and moving their emotions. These essays have tried to cover not only a wide time spectrum but also to reveal the variety and range of such ceremonies devised in diverse European Courts as well as unravelling the innovations which underlay fashions which had multiple international repercussions. <BR /><BR /> <BR /><BR /> Featuring contributions by: Monique Chatenet, Murielle Gaude-Ferragu, Gérard Sabatier, Agostino Paracivini_Bagliani, Alain Marchandisse, Joël Burden, Mickaël Boytsov, Maria Nadia Covini, Eva Pibiri, Marie-Madeleine Fontaine, Giovanni Ricci, Gérard Sabatier, Maria Adelaida Allo Manero, Naïma Ghermani, Birgitte B. Johannsen.
✦ Table of Contents
Front Matter
Colour Plates
Monique Chatenet, Murielle Gaude-Ferragu, and Gérard Sabatier. Introduction. The Changing Face of Funerals (1400–1700)
Agostino Paravicini Bagliani. Chapter 1. The Funerary Rite of the Papacy at the End of the Middle Ages
Murielle Gaude-Ferragu. Chapter 2. ‘The Body of the Prince’
Alain Marchandisse. Chapter 3. The Funerals of the Dukes of Burgundy in the Fifteenth Century
Joel Burden. Chapter 4. English Royal Funerals in the Fifteenth Century
Mikhail Boytsov. Chapter 5. Death and Funerals of German Emperors, Kings, and Princes in the Fifteenth Century
Maria Nadia Covini. Chapter 6. Between Visconti and Sforza
Eva Pibiri. Chapter 7. The Funerals of the Dukes of Savoy in the Fifteenth Century
Marie Madeleine Fontaine. Chapter 8. Funerary Rites and Mysteries held in Connection with Treatises on Ancient Funerals in Sixteenth-Century France
Monique Chatenet. Chapter 9. Royal and Princely French Funerals in the Sixteenth Century
Giovanni Ricci. Chapter 10. Double Funerals and Funeral Effigies in Italian States
Alain Marchandisse. Chapter 11. The Funeral of Charles V
Gérard Sabatier. Chapter 12. The Funerals of Louis XIII and Louis XIV
Giovanni Ricci. Chapter 13. Great Funerals in a Little State
Maria Adelaida Allo Manero. Chapter 14. Philip IV of Spain
Naϊma Ghermani. Chapter 15. The Funeral of Maurice of Hesse-Kassel (1632)
Birgitte Bøggild Johannsen. Chapter 16. Staging the Queen’s Funeral in Seventeenth-Century Denmark
Back Matter
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